Eliciting Risk Perceptions: Does Conditional Question Wording Have a Downside?
Jeremy D StruederJane E MillerXianshen YuPaul D WindschitlPublished in: Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making (2024)
Conditional wording, which is commonly recommended for eliciting risk perceptions, has a potential downside.It can produce overestimates of the true relationship between perceived risk and prevention behavior, as established in the current work.Though concerning, the biasing effect of conditional wording was small-relative to the measurement benefits that conditioning usually provides-and should not deter researchers from conditioning risk perceptions.More research is needed to determine when the biasing impact of conditional wording is strongest.